We have two papers in press! Our paper on a putative acetylation system in V. cholerae was accepted to Applied and Environmental Microbiology and our paper exploring a variety of aspects of CrbS-dependent signaling mechanisms in V. cholerae was accepted to Journal of Bacteriology! Congrats to everyone involved -- particularly Kalle Liimatta '16, Itai Muzhingi '18, Cecilia Prado, and Mariame Sylla '15, whose work really anchored these publications.

Over the past four weeks our lab has packed, moved, and unpacked into our gorgeous new space in the Science Center! It's been a whirlwind, but we are ready to get our experiments going again, just as soon as we get the okay!

Before the move!

Before the move - we are starting to think about packing!

The movers arrive to pack us up on August 2!

And they are done! Just waiting for the boxes to be moved.

the contents of my office are now in my lab and I begin to wonder whether all of this is going to fit in my new office?

Our fly incubator JUST barely makes it out of the door to the fly room.... it was close.

Our new home!

Beautiful! (Our lab is to the left, on this floor).

Our BSL2 room is getting packed

Everything is packed!

Our -80C freezer makes the trek over to the new building, safe and sound, thanks to the wonderful care of the folks at Pacific Movers (and Cecilia's watchful eye!)

Our new lab, shared with two other colleagues!

The view into the lab from the hallway! (yes there is a lot of glass in the new space!)

The view from the write-up space. There is A LOT of glass. (A few weeks later we are already used to it!)

​Biology senior honors thesis student Sarah Nessen '18 and BCBP senior honors thesis student Itai Muzhingi '18, both working in the lab, traveled to Chicago, IL for Vibrio2017: The Biology of Vibrios, an international conference organized by the American Society for Microbiology. The conference included researchers from around the world who study the ecology, evolution, pathogenesis, genomics, and symbiotic mechanisms of this important bacterial group.

At the conference, Sarah presented an invited talk entitled, “Regulatory mechanisms affecting consumption of a short chain fatty acid that mediates symbiosis in Vibrio fischeri” on the lab’s new collaboration with Mark Mandel of the University of Wisconsin-Madison to understand molecular mechanisms affecting symbiosis with the Hawaiian bobtail squid. Sarah also received a travel award from the American Society for Microbiology to present her work! Others who contributed to the talk included Stephany Flores-Ramos ’17, Kyra Raines ’20, Abigail Mesfin ’20, and Sarah Wishloff ’19.

A couple of images of Sarah giving her talk to a fairly large crowd. She was the only undergraduate to speak at the conference!

Itai presented a poster entitled “Regulatory domains in the hybrid sensor kinase CrbS modulate direct activation of acetyl-CoA synthase transcription in the pathogen Vibrio cholerae.” At the end of the conference, he won an award – for graduate students! He received the “Outstanding Student Poster Presentation Award in –Omics and Regulation”! This was just one of five poster awards presented at the conference! Others contributing work presented in the poster include Cecilia Prado, Duy Nguyen, and Franny Diehl. (Unfortunately Itai wasn't there to receive the certificate, so here he is in our hallway in our hallway in Amherst!

Lastly, Alix Purdy presented work by a number of previous students in the lab, entitled “Protein acetylation alters metabolite-dependent virulence of Vibrio cholerae in a Drosophila model of infection” with co-authors Kalle Liimatta ’16, Emily Flaherty ’19, Gabby Ro ’19, and Cecilia Prado.Congrats everyone on a great conference!

​A small contingent from the lab trekked to Harvard University to attend the Boston Bacterial Meeting on June15 & 16, 2017! Cecilia gave a great poster, and the Pioneer Valley was well represented with labs from Mount Holyoke and Smith Colleges, as well as UMass-Amherst in attendance as well!

Our NSF grant in collaboration with Josh Sharp at Northern Michigan University has been funded! This will bring more opportunities for students to join the lab, a number of new and challenging projects with support from Kevin Griffith at UMass-Amherst and Mark Mandel at University of Wisconsin-Madison, and the development of a course-based undergraduate research experience for Biol-271 Microbiology featuring the universally beloved Vibrio fischeri-Euprymna squid symbiosis! It will also support outreach efforts in our communities of the Pioneer Valley in Massachusetts and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, as well as the Amherst Association for Women in Science (AWIS) Peer Mentoring Program! An exciting few years for the lab ahead!

Our paper on the CrbS/R system in non-O1/non-O139 V. cholerae, as well as P. entomophila and P. aeruginosa is out in PLOS ONE here! Congrats to Anna Rasmussen '13, Paul Tyler '14, Mariah Servos '14, and Mariame Sylla '15, all of whom contributed data and V. cholerae strains to this manuscript!

Duy, Stephany, Jenny, Cecilia, Angelika and SabriAnan and I head over to UMass for the second annual Pioneer Valley Microbiology Symposium, held January 14, 2017. With three posters and a talk, the Purdy Lab was well represented!

Stephany was invited to give a talk -- one of just two undergrad talks at the meeting! Great job Steph!